
Studio Art
The Studio Art curriculum prepare students to develop independent creative work, research new concepts, and gain in-depth skills in a particular medium.
A focused, rigorous curriculum in the visual arts built on an interdisciplinary, interactive and international broad-based liberal arts experience.
The Muhlenberg Department of Art was founded in 1953 by internationally famous sculptor George Rickey. In the decades since, art at Muhlenberg has expanded with an interdisciplinary, interactive and international focus. Our rigorous visual arts curriculum is built on a foundation made strong by Muhlenberg’s broad-based liberal arts programming.
Students may pursue majors and minors in both studio art and art history, and diverse course offerings offer preparation for not only M.F.A. and Ph.D. programs around the nation and world, but for success in fields as varied as art education, publication editing and design, medical illustration, medicine and law.
Department of Art Anti-Racism and Inclusivity Statement
The Studio Art curriculum prepare students to develop independent creative work, research new concepts, and gain in-depth skills in a particular medium.
The art history curriculum prepares students to analyze and interpret visual art and to understand the fundamental methodological issues of the field.
Sculpture Professor Frederick Wright Jones consults with a student in a studio art class. Our faculty exhibit nationwide, and their own experiences provide insight for students who wish to pursue careers in artistic fields.
Studio major Tongyao Su works on a drawing outside of the Center for the Arts. Students have access to a range of facilities housed in the Center for the Arts. The department’s low faculty-to-student ratio ensures that students receive the best of both worlds—individualized attention with the freedom to take the lead in exploring personal creative interests.
Students examine prints from the College’s archives as part of an integrative learning course with faculty from Muhlenberg’s History Department. Our curriculum approaches art with an interdisciplinary, interactive and international lens.
Muhlenberg students view an exhibition by senior studio art majors in our very own Martin Art Gallery. The gallery also shows high quality work by local, national, and international artists. In addition, students have access to dozens of exhibits, lectures, and internships at the nearby Allentown Art Museum and local colleges. The world-class museums and galleries of New York and Philadelphia are within one to two hours.
Ana Negron exhibits her final thesis in sculpture. Students choose an area of concentration, while receiving a broad foundation in studio arts and art history and by complementing their majors or minors with courses in other disciplines.
Katherine Boll discusses her thesis project with classmates in the Martin Gallery during an exhibition. We believe that our students should have access to as many resources as possible in order to foster their personal, academic, and artistic growth.
At Muhlenberg, each student is exposed to a variety of ideas, ways of thinking and academic disciplines, regardless of what they end up declaring as a major. These stories demonstrate the power and potential of such an education.
In her first months in the role, Jessica Ambler is prioritizing student and faculty involvement in the gallery’s exhibitions and in displays she’s helping to curate throughout campus.
On January 31, the campus community filled the halls of the new Fahy Commons, visiting the academic and program spaces and getting an up-close look at its remarkable sustainability features. View photos of the open house.
Students, faculty and staff will gather to kick off the opening of Muhlenberg's newest academic building, one of the most ambitious sustainable building projects in the world.